Nada Surf - Moon Mirror Tour

Fri May 2 2025

8:00 PM (Doors 7:00 PM)

Grog Shop

2785 Euclid Heights Boulevard Cleveland Heights, OH 44106

$25.00

All Ages

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Friday, May 2

Nada Surf with The Cle Elum LIVE at Grog Shop

Doors 7 PM | Show 8 PM
All Ages
$25 advance / $30 day of show
+ $3 at the door if under 21

Moon Mirror, Nada Surf's new record, has everything fans love and expect from them. Bittersweet anthems that begin quietly but explode into soaring harmonies? Check. Songs that are play-on-repeat heart punches? Check. Songs that are poetic and thought-provoking while also being absolute belt-at-the-top-of-your-voice-with-the-windows-down masterpieces? Check. It's all here.

Nada Surf is Matthew Caws, Daniel Lorca, Ira Elliot, and Louie Lino. Moon Mirror, their first for New West Records, was produced by the band and Ian Laughton at Rockfield Studios in Wales.

Moon Mirror is a thrilling and moving leap forward for Nada Surf. The songs on the album are true to the human experience — as meaningful and mysterious and sometimes absurd as it is. There's love, yes, but also grief, deep loneliness, doubt, wonder, and hope. These are not the songs of a band in their 20s. There is hard-won wisdom here, and hard-won belief in possibility — the kind that comes from falling down and getting back up.

"Give Me The Sun" ("I'm looking for something/ I can't say exactly what"), "Second Skin" ("I'm tired of living in this second skin/ I want to let everything in"), and "Moon Mirror" ("connect me to something") grapple with being present and open, paying attention, and seeking connection in a world that feels alienating with its everything-all-at-once-ness. "In Front of Me Now" is a song against multi-tasking and sleepwalking through the one life we have. The song asks, "Why wasn't I present? I could have been living," and shows us a transformation in the chorus: "Today, I do what's in front of me now." I don't know about you, but I need this reminder as much as ever.

Nada Surf has been working together for decades, and they're consistently excellent, but they always surprise me. That's what great art does. For nearly 30 years, Nada Surf has been a part of the soundtrack of my life. Our lives. I fell hard for the band over Let Go in 2002, and following that, The Weight Is a Gift, in 2005. Those songs are lodged in my body, someplace they'll never be extracted from. So are songs from The Proximity Effect, Lucky, The Stars Are Indifferent to Astronomy, and Never Not Together, which was my favorite record of 2020. Moon Mirror will take its place among the others, in heavy rotation.

Four years ago, during lockdown, I was listening to Nada Surf one morning. My son, then seven years old, was quiet, and then he said, "They sing a lot about love."

What he said next has stuck with me: "It protects you."

Love protects you. If you need convincing, I think Moon Mirror will do just that. Lucky, lucky us to have had Nada Surf's music with us for all of these years, and lucky, lucky us to have these new songs now, right when we need them most.

– Maggie Smith

Nada Surf - Moon Mirror Tour

  • Nada Surf

    Nada Surf

    Alternative Rock

    Moon Mirror, Nada Surf's new record, has everything fans love and expect from them. Bittersweet anthems that begin quietly but explode into soaring harmonies? Check. Songs that are play-on-repeat heart punches? Check. Songs that are poetic and thought-provoking while also being absolute belt-at-the-top-of-your-voice-with-the-windows-down masterpieces? Check. It's all here.

    Nada Surf is Matthew Caws, Daniel Lorca, Ira Elliot, and Louie Lino. Moon Mirror, their first for New West Records, was produced by the band and Ian Laughton at Rockfield Studios in Wales.

    Moon Mirror is a thrilling and moving leap forward for Nada Surf. The songs on the album are true to the human experience — as meaningful and mysterious and sometimes absurd as it is. There's love, yes, but also grief, deep loneliness, doubt, wonder, and hope. These are not the songs of a band in their 20s. There is hard-won wisdom here, and hard-won belief in possibility — the kind that comes from falling down and getting back up.

    "Give Me The Sun" ("I'm looking for something/ I can't say exactly what"), "Second Skin" ("I'm tired of living in this second skin/ I want to let everything in"), and "Moon Mirror" ("connect me to something") grapple with being present and open, paying attention, and seeking connection in a world that feels alienating with its everything-all-at-once-ness. "In Front of Me Now" is a song against multi-tasking and sleepwalking through the one life we have. The song asks, "Why wasn't I present? I could have been living," and shows us a transformation in the chorus: "Today, I do what's in front of me now." I don't know about you, but I need this reminder as much as ever.

    Nada Surf has been working together for decades, and they're consistently excellent, but they always surprise me. That's what great art does. For nearly 30 years, Nada Surf has been a part of the soundtrack of my life. Our lives. I fell hard for the band over Let Go in 2002, and following that, The Weight Is a Gift, in 2005. Those songs are lodged in my body, someplace they'll never be extracted from. So are songs from The Proximity Effect, Lucky, The Stars Are Indifferent to Astronomy, and Never Not Together, which was my favorite record of 2020. Moon Mirror will take its place among the others, in heavy rotation.

    Four years ago, during lockdown, I was listening to Nada Surf one morning. My son, then seven years old, was quiet, and then he said, "They sing a lot about love."

    What he said next has stuck with me: "It protects you."

    Love protects you. If you need convincing, I think Moon Mirror will do just that. Lucky, lucky us to have had Nada Surf's music with us for all of these years, and lucky, lucky us to have these new songs now, right when we need them most.

    – Maggie Smith

  • The Cle Elum

    The Cle Elum

    Power Pop

    For Sarah Sargent Pepper and Ian Lee, first came love, then came a business marriage, then came the baby, their indie rock outfit The Cle Elum. “The band was formed in the total wrong order,” Lee jokes, ahead of the duo’s long-in-the-making debut album, It's Ok If It Falls Apart, out Friday, August 16, 2024 on independent label, Winston Sounds.

    The Chattanooga, Tenessee-based couple – both starting out as drummers – first met in 2011. At that time, Lee had logged an extensive history with rock and punk acts including Bad Oskar, Woolworthy, Not Rebecca, Tom Daily, Electric Airlines (with Ed Roser from Urge Overkill), Kevin Lee (with Jon Brant from Cheap Trick), Goodbye Satellite, Anita and Led Zeppelin 2. Sargent Pepper had also spent a good number of years behind the kit and behind the scenes as a tour manager and merchandising pro.

    With the couple finding themselves “inseparable” and a “true force of nature team,” they devised a way to stay together on the road, establishing their company Affordable Tour Solutions that provides support for a wide range of acts including Manchester Orchestra, Nada Surf, Son Volt, Wolf Alice, Andrew Bird, Iron and Wine, Bright Eyes, Cursive, The Get Up Kids, Lucy Dacus, The Black Angels, Sylvan Esso and many others.

    But being on the road also provided Sargent Pepper and Lee with the support they needed to give The Cle Elum its own set of wheels. “We have been touring nonstop for 10 years. We’re surrounded 24/7 with incredible inspiration,” says Sargent Pepper. “Part of our story is, ‘How much inspiration can you take?’"

    Their road crew experience, creating safe environments for artists to perform, also served them well as a collaborative duo, especially as they found time to focus on The Cle Elum when the pandemic shut down the music industry. “When making art, you have to be extremely sensitive to the input of the other person, and this sensitivity and care for each other was critical when these songs were written,” says Lee.

    What resulted was a rich collection of songs – Sargent Pepper on drums and Lee on vocals, guitars and keys – like the foot stomping power pop anthem, “Handclaps and Tambourines,” the catchy alt rock ditty, “I Am A Robot” and the pensive, harmony-filled narrative, “Goodbye Night Sky.” The all-encompassing musical style harkens back to the band’s name, borrowed from the eastern Washington town where Sargent Pepper often went camping as a child. It honors the native Kittitas people, with Cle Elum translating to “swift water,” which says Sargent Pepper, “fits the character of the band’s interest in not being defined to any category of music.”

    “We relate to concepts like non-binary or open source (in tech), and feel these concepts are important in art,” adds Lee. “We identify as a rock band, who think like punk rock people, but we might want to write a country song. We want to be both DIY and we want to be part of many communities. We believe in the power of music to bring people together.” Their music did much of the same as their own community rallied behind them on a number of songs with Nada Surf’s Matthew Caws guesting on “I Am A Robot” and The Smoking Pope’s Josh Caterer appearing on “Goodbye Night Sky” and “Did I Get High.”

    If there’s one unifying theme to It's Ok If It Falls Apart, it’s that when people come together – in music, in life, in love – it is a powerful thing. “Do we need governments anymore? Are the 1% really going to win? There’s more of us than there are of them, and all they seem to want to do is keep us arguing with each other so we don't look at them. But when you tour you meet a completely different set of people in every city. You realize that there are very few people who are not trying to improve things,” says Lee. “The system is broken, people are not. It’s okay if it falls apart, because we can work together to fix it.”

Please correct the information below.

Select ticket quantity.

Select Tickets

limit 10 per person
General Admission

$25.00

Delivery Method

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Will Call

Terms & Conditions

+ $3 AT DOOR IF UNDER 21

Nada Surf - Moon Mirror Tour

Fri May 2 2025 8:00 PM

(Doors 7:00 PM)

Grog Shop Cleveland Heights OH
Nada Surf - Moon Mirror Tour

$25.00 All Ages

Friday, May 2

Nada Surf with The Cle Elum LIVE at Grog Shop

Doors 7 PM | Show 8 PM
All Ages
$25 advance / $30 day of show
+ $3 at the door if under 21

Moon Mirror, Nada Surf's new record, has everything fans love and expect from them. Bittersweet anthems that begin quietly but explode into soaring harmonies? Check. Songs that are play-on-repeat heart punches? Check. Songs that are poetic and thought-provoking while also being absolute belt-at-the-top-of-your-voice-with-the-windows-down masterpieces? Check. It's all here.

Nada Surf is Matthew Caws, Daniel Lorca, Ira Elliot, and Louie Lino. Moon Mirror, their first for New West Records, was produced by the band and Ian Laughton at Rockfield Studios in Wales.

Moon Mirror is a thrilling and moving leap forward for Nada Surf. The songs on the album are true to the human experience — as meaningful and mysterious and sometimes absurd as it is. There's love, yes, but also grief, deep loneliness, doubt, wonder, and hope. These are not the songs of a band in their 20s. There is hard-won wisdom here, and hard-won belief in possibility — the kind that comes from falling down and getting back up.

"Give Me The Sun" ("I'm looking for something/ I can't say exactly what"), "Second Skin" ("I'm tired of living in this second skin/ I want to let everything in"), and "Moon Mirror" ("connect me to something") grapple with being present and open, paying attention, and seeking connection in a world that feels alienating with its everything-all-at-once-ness. "In Front of Me Now" is a song against multi-tasking and sleepwalking through the one life we have. The song asks, "Why wasn't I present? I could have been living," and shows us a transformation in the chorus: "Today, I do what's in front of me now." I don't know about you, but I need this reminder as much as ever.

Nada Surf has been working together for decades, and they're consistently excellent, but they always surprise me. That's what great art does. For nearly 30 years, Nada Surf has been a part of the soundtrack of my life. Our lives. I fell hard for the band over Let Go in 2002, and following that, The Weight Is a Gift, in 2005. Those songs are lodged in my body, someplace they'll never be extracted from. So are songs from The Proximity Effect, Lucky, The Stars Are Indifferent to Astronomy, and Never Not Together, which was my favorite record of 2020. Moon Mirror will take its place among the others, in heavy rotation.

Four years ago, during lockdown, I was listening to Nada Surf one morning. My son, then seven years old, was quiet, and then he said, "They sing a lot about love."

What he said next has stuck with me: "It protects you."

Love protects you. If you need convincing, I think Moon Mirror will do just that. Lucky, lucky us to have had Nada Surf's music with us for all of these years, and lucky, lucky us to have these new songs now, right when we need them most.

– Maggie Smith

Please correct the information below.

Select ticket quantity.

Select Tickets

All Ages
limit 10 per person
General Admission
$25.00

Delivery Method

ticketFast
Will Call

Terms & Conditions

+ $3 AT DOOR IF UNDER 21